@"{\f38\froman\fcharset204\fprq2 Times New Roman Cyr;}{\f40\froman\fcharset161\fprq2 Times New Roman Greek;}{\f41\froman\fcharset162\fprq2 Times New Roman Tur;}{\f42\fbidi \froman\fcharset177\fprq2 Times New Roman (Hebrew);} " +

@"{\f43\fbidi \froman\fcharset178\fprq2 Times New Roman (Arabic);}{\f44\froman\fcharset186\fprq2 Times New Roman Baltic;}{\f45\froman\fcharset163\fprq2 Times New Roman (Vietnamese);}{\f47\fswiss\fcharset238\fprq2 Arial CE;} " +

Answers

Word has never supported RTF as a "native" format. A converter has always been required (and supplied with the application). In order for the converter to trigger, the RTF either needs to be pasted in from the clipboard or loaded from a file.

The alternative to your approach would be to stream the RTF to a (text) file (with the extension *.rtf) then use the Open or the InsertFile method to bring it into Word.

All replies

Word has never supported RTF as a "native" format. A converter has always been required (and supplied with the application). In order for the converter to trigger, the RTF either needs to be pasted in from the clipboard or loaded from a file.

The alternative to your approach would be to stream the RTF to a (text) file (with the extension *.rtf) then use the Open or the InsertFile method to bring it into Word.